WHY DO FAT PEOPLE SMELL BAD?


WHY DO FAT PEOPLE SMELL BAD?

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Obese people receive enough judgment regarding their activity levels, attractiveness, and even social traits. While most are unfair, a few are grounded in reality, albeit exaggerated. One of these assumptions is that fat people smell bad.

The harsh truth is that fat people do have a stronger and more objectionable body odor and lets not beat about the bush for the sake of political correctness. For a fat person, it is often more difficult to keep clean and nice smelling and I am sure no fat person enjoys being smelly and especially when they themselves don’t enjoy it either when other people around them stink.

So let’s take a look at why fat people smell bad (sometimes) and what can be done about it.

Fat people smell bad because they sweat more, and their size makes their armpits warm enough for the bacterial breakdown of sweat. This bacterial activity produces the foul smell often associated with sweat and can be reduced by cleaning the moisture trapped in skin folds, armpits, and the groin area.

In this blog post, you will discover each factor that contributes to body odor and how you can make sure none of them applies to you regardless of your size. You will also find products you must carry so you don’t have BO emergencies no matter how much you sweat. We will also go over the two tests that help you pick up your own scent.

But first, let’s go over the most significant contributors to bad smells.

Factors That Lead to Bad Smell (And How They Affect Obese People)

Fat people aren’t inherently worse-smelling, but a few things remain unseen or unaddressed, which result in foul odor. Fortunately, that means plus-size individuals can take control of their hygiene and scent by paying attention to the factors that cause bad body odor.

Sweating More

While sweat itself is odorless, it is broken down by bacteria and fungi. This activity produces a bad body odor.

The average plus-size individual has enough fat around their organs to cause higher internal temperature. The sweat glands produce moisture to cool your body off. Since fat people sweat more, they are more prone to smelling bad.

Skin Folds


The smell of sweat (or the odor of bacterial activity) is directly related to how biologically active the sweat is. Air evaporates sweat, whereas folds and crevasses shelter it.

Since fat people have skin folds, the trapped moisture becomes one of the leading contributors to bacterial activity, which results in poor body odor.

Warmer Temperature


Fat people have thicker limbs which means their groin area and armpits are covered with more matter. These are also areas where sweat usually accumulates.

When thick limbs cover the sweat, it becomes warm enough to be hospitable for odor-causing bacteria, resulting in poor body odor.

How Fat People Can Smell Better (3 Tips)

Because body odor is a direct result of bacterial activity in a layer of sweat, if you can prevent sweating (or remove sweat quickly), you will smell better.

Unfortunately, using a perfume or deodorant to cover up the nasty smell of sweat doesn’t work all that well. Perfume should always be applied on a clean body.  Perfume is no substitute for a good shower. 

Here are the tips and tricks one can use to smell better:

1. Regular Shower and use of an Antiperspirant


Regular showering will clean your body and remove any bacteria on your skin. Application of an antiperspirant following a shower can be a useful remedy. Anti-perspiring products block sweat glands for up to 24 hours.

2. Use Citric Acid (Lemon Juice)

Citric acid kills bacteria, and lemon has plenty of it. You can squeeze fresh lemon juice and bottle it up in a tiny spray bottle.

Whenever you become conscious of poor odor, you can spray it directly on the body from where the smell emerges to neutralize the odor and kill or slow down bacteria (by changing the pH).

3. Use a Cold Spray

Finally, you can use low temperatures to kill the bacteria and cool off.

For this, you’d need to have a larger container because cold sprays don’t come in atomizer-style mini-bottles. There are several options such as “Max Freeze” that you can pick up at Walmart.

How to Tell if You Smell Bad?


One of the biggest challenges for people of all sizes is understanding how they smell.

Because of our nostrils’ quick adaptation to odors of all sorts, a smell that builds up gradually goes unnoticed. This creates a social risk as people can pick up on our body odors from a distance while we remain oblivious.

I am sure that no fat person has a desire to give anyone else extra ammunition to judge them based on their size.

Smell Your Clothes


One way to make sure you don’t have body odor is to remove your clothes and stay away from them for at least ten minutes.

After that, you should sniff the clothes to detect hints of body odor. This tactic works because the smell receptors in your nose shut down after constantly detecting the same scent.

When you’re away from your clothes, the receptors adjust to a lower level of body odor.

Upon shoving your nose into your shirt, you are exposed to an intense amount of the same scent. If it smells foul, you smell foul. Time to wash your clothes and shower immediately. 

Is this practical? Yes, but only to an extent.

To remove your shirt, you need to be in a secluded environment. A relatively clean washroom works.

So, if you’re at a friend’s party, this method works. But if you are at the office and the washroom isn’t an odor-neutral environment, you cannot use the shirt-removal tactic.

Wash your clothes regularly. If for some reason you are unable to do laundry, then as a last resort, you can always pop your clothes in a ziplock bag and put them in a freezer to get rid of the smell of sweat. The low temperatures can kill the bacteria. 

Offset Your Bias

Remember that even when you can feel that you smell bad, your nose downplays it. We all have a bias toward how we smell.

A good rule of thumb is to assume that what you smell when you put your nose directly on a sweaty part of your body is what people smell while standing five feet away from you. So, if  you’re not in a place where you can remove your clothes to smell them, you can simply steal enough time alone to sniff an armpit.

Assume that You Smell Bad


If you don’t use perfume to cover up your body odor, there is no risk in assuming that you smell bad and plenty of social risk in assuming you smell okay.

So whenever you feel the need to test how you smell, you can use the cold spray method to remove the bacterial build-up and start smelling relatively neutral.

CONCLUDING REMARKS

Fat people smell bad because they sweat more, and their size makes it easier for the moisture to be trapped at a higher temperature. Eliminating sweat or creating an environment that kills the smelly sweat bacteria can lead to a neutral-smelling body. AND of course shower twice a day with regular laundry and change of clothing that have been laundered will go along way to keeping you smell good. Remember, when you smell good, you will feel good about yourself, and others will then find you more appealing.


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